“You must be so happy living in Bermuda,” I often hear when I tell people where I now make my home. “It is going to be really hard when you have to leave,” many then follow up.
My response? “It is great here. I am very happy. And I can be happy anywhere. I get to decide that.”
This is a truism I have had to relearn and remind myself of with regularity, and it’s one that I frequently discuss with my daughter, Talulla.
One of the most influential Buddhist teachers of our time, Thich Nhat Hanh, captured this concept perfectly when he said, “There is no way to happiness – happiness is the way.” What he captures more eloquently than I can, is the idea that happiness is not a destination that we can reach, but rather it is a way of being in the world. We can choose to be happy in each moment by accepting the present moment as it is and finding joy in the small things.
Buddhism teaches that the root of suffering is attachment to desires and outcomes. We often believe that we need certain things to be happy, such as a perfect job, a perfect partner, or a perfect life. However, the truth is that these external factors can never truly bring us lasting happiness, as anyone familiar with the hedonic treadmill concept knows well. We must find happiness within ourselves by letting go of attachment and embracing the present moment.
There is a flip side to this as well. I may be misremembering the quote, but a character in Tom Robbins’ Fierce Invalids Home from Hot Climates expresses a thought that we can be the kind of person who complains about the weather, or not that kind of person. This idea was revelatory to me at the time. Wait! I get to decide if I want to be the kind of person who complains about the weather? Knowing that, how could I ever choose to be that kind of person?
Other belief systems and philosophies beyond Buddhism also support the idea that happiness, and along with it unhappiness, are choices. Stoicism, for example, emphasizes the importance of focusing on what is within our control and letting go of what is not. By accepting that we cannot control external circumstances, we can focus on cultivating a peaceful and contented mind.
Positive psychology also emphasizes the power of choice in happiness. Research has shown that our mindset and thoughts play a significant role in our overall well-being. By choosing to focus on the positive aspects of our lives, we can increase our happiness levels and improve our mental health.
Personally, I have found that practicing mindfulness and gratitude has helped me cultivate greater happiness in my life. Mindfulness for me is about developing the practice of paying attention to the present moment without passing judgment one way or the other. My gratitude practice is a fluid one, alternating between reminding myself of those things for which I am grateful, as well as capturing and reliving those moments when others have expressed their gratitude to me. By practicing these techniques regularly, I have learned to better appreciate the small joys in life like swimming, meditating, or having a tickle fight with Talulla, and to let go of attachment to outcomes.
It is a fact that life will not always be roses, puppies, and sunshine. Life is full of ups and downs, and it’s natural to feel sad or frustrated at times. However, even in the midst of difficult circumstances, we can choose to focus on what we are grateful for and find moments of joy. Being able to discuss and work through these things with my seven-year-old daughter has helped. As a child, where you feel the lack of agency perhaps more than at any time during life, the frustrations are manifold. Talking to her about how even in those times she is the one with the power to decide if she will be happy or not helps her reclaim that lost agency and provides me with a good self-reminder at the same time.
To finish where we started, yes! I am indeed happy living in Bermuda. And yes, I still encounter frustrations that could detract from that happiness if I choose to allow them to do so. As my wife, Katy, is the first to remind me, I am far from great at this (yet), but for now, both for myself and to try and model the same for Talulla, I choose happiness, not as a destination, but, as Thich Nhat Hanh would say, as the way.